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README.md |
XWIM
Do What I Mean Extractor
Continuing the emacs tradition of "Do What I Mean" tools, xwim is a replacement for the excellent, but unfortunately unmaintained, dtrx. xwim is a command line tool that targets two problems with archives:
- Command line tools for extracting archives are often archaic and differ considerably between formats
- Inconsiderately packaged archives tend to spill their content over the directory they are extracted to
Usage
Invoking xwim
is as simple as:
xwim archive.tar.gz
This will extract the archive to the current folder. If the archive contains a single root folder it is just extracted as is. Otherwise xwim first creates a folder named after the archive and extracts the contents there.
xwim /home/user/
This will create an archive in the "platform native" format (zip on windows,
tar.gz on unix) in the current working directory. The archive contains a single
root folder user
and is itself named user.zip
or user.tar.gz
.
xwim /home/user/file.txt
This will create an archive in the "platform native" format (zip on windows,
tar.gz on unix) in the current working directory. The archive contains a single
entry file.txt
and is itself named file.zip
or file.tar.gz
.
Examples
Single root folder named after the archive
archive.tar.gz
|
-- archive/
|
-- file.txt
|
-- file2.txt
xwim will just extract the archive to the current directory.
Multiple files/folders in archive root
archive.tar.gz
|
-- archive/
| |
| -- file.txt
|
-- file2.txt
xwim will create a folder archive
in the current directory and extract the
archive contents there.
Supported formats
xwim supports most formats supported by libarchive:
- 7-zip: 7z, 7zip
- zip: jar, zip
- bzip2: bz2, bzip2
- gzip: gz, gzip
- xzip: xz
- rar: rar
- tar with compression: tgz, tar.gz, tar.bz2, tar.xz
Install
xwim is currently released as a dynamically linked glibc binary only. The releases can be downloaded from https://git.friedl.net/incubator/xwim/releases and should run on most glibc based GNU/Linux distributions. The following dependencies have to be installed:
Approaching the first stable release we will release for more platforms.
Build
xwim is built with meson. To compile xwim from source you need:
Additionally you need some libraries installed:
# Get the source
git clone https://git.friedl.net/incubator/xwim.git
# Build xwim executable
cd xwim
meson build
cd build
meson compile
# Run executable on the test archive
# This will extract root.tar.gz to
# the current working directory
src/xwim test/archives/root.tar.gz
Configure
xwim strives to just do the right thing out of the box. Consequently, it does not require any configuration. If you are unhappy with the defaults you can change them though.
Changing the log level
Per default xwim chooses an appropriate log level according to your build type
(debug/release builds). If you want to change the verbosity you can set the
XWIM_LOGLEVEL
environment variable. Valid levels are:
- trace
- debug
- info
- warning
- error
- critical
- off
Contributing
While xwim is still in incubator phase (i.e. before version 1.0) its main repository is hosted on https://git.friedl.net/incubator/xwim with a mirror on https://github.com/arminfriedl/xwim. With the first stable release it will most likely move to GitHub as its main repository.
If you want to contribute, you can either issue a pull request on its Github mirror (will be cherry picked into the main repository) or send patches to dev[at]friedl[dot]net.
If you are interested in a long-term co-maintainership you can also drop me a mail for an account on https://git.friedl.net.
Known Issues
- Parsing filters is unsupported
There is a somewhat long standing
bug in the underlying
libarchive library. rar files might fail with
Parsing filters is unsupported
. In case you run into this issue, the only workaround for now is to use another extraction tool.